Reality vs. Romance: Managing Unrealistic Maintenance Expectations in Family Law.
As family law practitioners, our role often oscillates between legal strategist and reality counselor. While our primary duty is to fiercely advocate for our clients' best interests, a significant portion of our time is spent managing expectations that are completely disconnected from financial reality.
When a client walks into a consultation room demanding terms that are mathematically impossible, it rarely stems from malice. Instead, it is usually the product of deeply ingrained social illusions and a fundamental misunderstanding of how South African courts evaluate maintenance claims.
The anatomy of the disconnect: where the illusion begins.
To understand why a client might make an irrational demand, we have to look at the psychological timeline that leads up to a divorce. Two primary factors consistently distort a client's perception of money. First, the 'courtship persona': the seeds of financial delusion are almost always planted during the dating phase. During courtship, it is common practice for a partner to go out of their way to appear as wealthy and capable of providing as possible. This curated display creates an implicit financial guarantee. Enticed by this illusion of limitless stability, a partner enters the marriage assuming that this elevated baseline is permanent. When the marriage fractures, they expect the legal system to enforce a lifestyle that was actually a facade from day one. Second, the isolation from everyday expenses: unrealistic expectations thrive in a vacuum. If a person has historically been insulated from the workforce—never knowing what it means to earn their own salary, pay for a bond, or budget for groceries out of their own pocket—they easily fall under the impression that finances are limitless. Without the grounding reality of a monthly budget, the numbers on a maintenance claim become abstract concepts rather than real-world constraints.
Grounding the narrative: a view from the trenches.
This disconnect becomes glaringly obvious when contrasted with the actual economic realities of the young professionals handling these files. Early in my career, when I was a newly admitted junior professional assistant, I was earning roughly R12,000 per month. Out of that single sum, I had to cover my entire cost of living. During that exact time, I had a client firmly insist to me that she could not possibly survive the month on her own salary of R15,000. To a junior attorney managing their own life on less, navigating a client's insistence that a higher amount is unlivable is a stark lesson in subjective financial panic versus objective reality.
When left unchecked by counsel, this panic leads to catastrophic legal strategies. I once had a case where a woman and her parents adamantly insisted that I pursue a maintenance claim of R16,000 per month against the father of her child. The fatal flaw? The man's total monthly earnings were only R8,000. Demanding double a respondent's entire income is a strategy born of pure emotion, and it is entirely dead on arrival in a court of law.
How South African Law Evaluates Maintenance.
To guide clients away from these pitfalls, attorneys must strip away the emotion and look at the strict legal definitions. South African courts do not award maintenance to punish a spouse or to fulfill a wishlist; awards are strictly governed by a means and needs test, heavily influenced by the legal category of the claim.
Child maintenance covers the child's reasonable needs, housing, schooling, medical, food. It is an absolute, non-negotiable parental duty based on proportional income. It continues until the child becomes self-supporting, usually age 18 or completion of tertiary studies.
Rehabilitative spousal maintenance is designed as a temporary bridge for a dependent spouse who sacrificed career growth for the family. It provides time to retrain, refresh skills, and enter the job market. It is short-term and strictly fixed, such as 6 months to 2 to 3 years. It cannot be arbitrarily extended.
Permanent or lifelong spousal maintenance is reserved for exceptional cases where a spouse cannot reasonably re-enter the workforce due to advanced age, long marriage duration, or illness. It is indeterminate and terminates upon the death or remarriage of the recipient.
The court's approach to the means test.
When a client launches an interim maintenance application, such as a Rule 43 application in the High Court, judges look past the rhetoric and look straight at the bank statements. The court balances two core inquiries: what are the actual, justifiable needs of the applicant? The court explicitly distinguishes between what an applicant wants versus what they realistically need based on the standard of living during the marriage. Also, what is the actual capacity of the respondent to pay? You cannot squeeze water from a stone. If a demand exceeds a respondent's net means, the court will swiftly reject it, often penalizing the unreasonable party with a modest award or an adverse costs order.
The danger of over-litigating: a cautionary tale.
Historically, societal norms dictated that a woman would marry a man to support her rather than pursuing her own career. While modern law embraces financial independence and joint responsibility, remnants of that old mindset still cause clients to seek out legal representation that validates their unrealistic expectations.
Unfortunately, some practitioners—sometimes sharing the emotional sentiments of their clients rather than maintaining professional objectivity—will eagerly push a matter further, promising the moon.
I experienced the consequences of this dynamic firsthand with a client for whom I had brokered an incredibly favorable settlement. The deal on the table allowed her to walk out of the divorce with an immovable property, a house, registered entirely in her name, and R1 million cash in her bank account.
Objectively, this was a massive triumph that secured her future and fell perfectly within the limits of what was achievable and sustainable. However, driven by the illusion that there was more to extract, she terminated my mandate and moved to a female attorney who promised to fight for even higher maintenance.
The tragedy of this choice is that courts do not reward greed. When a settlement of that magnitude is rejected in favor of aggressive, unrealistic litigation, the assets are frequently eaten up by escalating legal fees, and the court ultimately delivers a far harsher, budget-conscious ruling.
Our ultimate value as legal advisors does not lie in telling the client what they want to hear. It lies in our ability to firmly bridge the gap between the lingering romance of the courtship phase and the cold, mathematical reality of the legal system. Securing a stable, independent future for a client requires a strategy built on hard numbers, statutory rules, and pragmatism—never on illusions.